2025 Cadel Evans

Mauro Schmid Wins Cadel Evans Road Race In Scorching Heat

Mauro Schmid Wins Cadel Evans Road Race In Scorching Heat

Mauro Schmid wins the 2025 Cadel Evans Road Race, holding off a strong chase in extreme heat to claim his first World Tour one-day classic victory.

Feb 2, 2025 by AFP Report
Mauro Schmid Wins Cadel Evans Road Race In Scorching Heat

Swiss champion Mauro Schmid held off an elite chasing pack in searing heat to win the first World Tour one-day classic of the season Sunday at the Cadel Evans Road Race in Australia.

Schmid’s Bold Move Secures Victory

The Jayco AlUla rider made his move on the downhill section of the final climb at Geelong with some seven kilometers (4.3 miles) left, opening a 10-second gap and clinging on for a solo finish in 4hrs 26.07mins.

Aaron Gate (Astana) narrowly pipped fellow New Zealander and last year's winner Laurence Pithie (Red Bull-BORA-hansgrohe) into second, three seconds behind Schmid.

Australia's Rudy Porter (ARA) took the King of the Mountain honors on a day when temperatures topped 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).

Career-Defining Win

"I think this is pretty close to the top," said Schmid when asked if it was his career highlight. "It's the first race I've won at World Tour level."

"The team helped me prepare as well," he added. "I came quite early to Australia. It was a big race for me, a big race for the team, so super happy that we could put a result together."

A field of 98 riders set off on the 184-kilometer course, which began and ended in Geelong and took in the southern coastline of Australia's Victoria state.

It culminated in four steep ascents up Challambra Crescent before a final downhill slope—where Schmid made his move—to the waterfront finish.

Race Drama Unfolds

Italy's Andrea Raccagni Noviero made an early break and spent over 100 kilometers at the front by himself, building a seven-minute cushion.

But he tired and was swallowed up by the peloton on the first of the four climbs.

Schmid's teammate Chris Harper took charge after the third Challambra climb, powering into a 40-second lead with 17 kilometers to go.

But he was caught on the final ascent by a pack including Schmid, who came over the summit fastest and couldn't be caught.

The Cadel Evans Road Race is named after Australia's four-time Olympic cyclist and 2011 Tour de France winner.

New Zealand's Ally Wollaston edged the Netherlands' Karlijn Swinkels to win the women's contest on Saturday.